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Environment

City parks to get local trees

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The Hindu              24.06.2013

City parks to get local trees

Aloysius Xavier Lopez

The city’s parks may be lush and green but the trees and bushes in them are not native to the country.

To promote indigenous green cover, the Chennai Corporation is now planning to plant native trees in all of its 324 parks. The move is also aimed at supporting local birds and insects that thrive on these trees.

On Saturday, the civic body held a meeting with various NGOs involved in environmental work, to chalk out the details of the project.

“The meeting included a sensitisation programme for all Corporation officials on the necessity of preserving local species of trees and shrubs. There were also several ideas mooted on preventing tree abuse,” said a Corporation official.

One of the participants of the meeting was Shobha Menon, managing trustee of Nizhal, an NGO that works to promote tree culture. “Now we can bring in more indigenous varieties of trees in all parks. All such trees can have name boards with interesting information about the species,” she said.

NGOs at Saturday’s meeting also stressed the need to raise nurseries of local trees and shrubs in all such parks with the involvement of the local community.

The civic body told the NGOs it would fully support this initiative and a resolution about this is likely to be passed by the Corporation Council shortly.

Last year, the civic body intensified landscape development in 100 new parks in the city’s recently-added areas.

Civic body to plant indigenous shrubs in all 324 parks to preserve species.

 

Tambaram’s new landmark

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Deccan Chronicle                17.06.2013

Tambaram’s new landmark

Attractive paintings adorn the walls at Muthurangam Park, East Tambaram.- DC
Attractive paintings adorn the walls at Muthurangam Park, East Tambaram.- DC

Chennai: Here’s good news for residents of Tambaram. The Muthurangam park that was under renovation for over five months will soon be opened to the public. Minister for animal husbandry T.K.M  Chinnayya and Tambaram municipality chairman M. Karikalan recently inspected the works at the park and the chairman informed that the park would be opened in a month’s time.

As many as 115 lamp posts are being erected and 15 new benches are being provided. “The lamp posts will be controlled by municipality workers through mobile GPRS and timer system. Around 30 workers are working daily to finish the work within the deadline.

We are yet to fix the RO purifier. Art works have been done on the walls of the park so that the public will not make the walls untidy,” said municipality commissioner S. Sivasubramanian. The three-acre park is renovated at an estimated cost of Rs78 lakh.

The government sanctioned Rs 30 lakh and the Tambaram municipality spent the remaining amount. Hindu Mission Hospital will carry out the maintenance work and the park will be open from 5 am to 9 pm. A long-time resident of Tambaram, R. Sivachandran said, “We are yet to visit the park. But, we came to know that the paintings inside the park are very attractive.”

 

In Selaiyur, methane from sewage becomes cooking gas

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The Hindu                15.06.2013

In Selaiyur, methane from sewage becomes cooking gas

Boon for localityThe gas will serve as fuel for 12 stoves, which can be used free of cost by residents —Photo: M. Srinath
Boon for localityThe gas will serve as fuel for 12 stoves, which can be used free of cost by residents —Photo: M. Srinath

Residents of Bharat Nagar in Selaiyur now have access to free, eco-friendly gas for their kitchen use.

Tambaram municipality on Friday launched a bio-methanation plant that will produce gas from sewage generated in a public toilet. This comes in the wake of a good response to the municipality’s novel project, ‘Namma Toilet’ to improve sanitation in public places.

The methane gas will serve as fuel for 12 stoves which can be used free of cost by residents. The facility was formally launched at a function on Friday morning at Bharat Nagar in ward no. 21 of the municipality.

A marginalised area

In 1988, Rajiv Gandhi attended the Congress party’s session in Maraimalai Nagar. To widen Grand Southern Trunk for his convoy, people living on the margins were evicted and provided alternate accommodation in Bharat Nagar. Of the 292 households in this locality, 135 do not have individual toilets to this day.

In 2003, a public toilet was constructed at a cost of Rs. 10 lakh, but was shut down two years later due to lack of maintenance.

 “All of us are daily wage earners. Our main grievance has been the lack of toilets. The women especially have been subject to severe inconvenience and embarrassment,” said R. Meena, a Bharat Nagar resident for 25 years.

A decision to spruce up the toilet was taken recently and it was suggested that a bio-methanation plant be added.

Municipal officials said separate toilets for women and men had been created and the sewage generated from them would accumulate in an elliptical digester sunk below the ground.

“The methane gas, generated naturally from the sewage, is directed through an overhead pipe which is then routed through smaller pipes to 12 conventional stoves in a separate kitchen located within the complex. It is free from malodour,” an official said.

The remaining sludge would, for the present, be flushed out through stormwater drains and linked to distribution pipes once the underground drainage project is completed here. User charges of Rs. 50 per family per month would be collected for the toilet facility and this revenue would be spent on its maintenance, the officials said.

K. Rajeswari, Meena’s neighbour, said, most families always ran out of their monthly quota of kerosene. “The liquefied petroleum gas cylinders are beyond our means. The free gas at the kitchen is a huge benefit to all of us,” she said.

Safe, easy to maintain

According to officials, there were no risks involved in the operation of the plant. The gas generated would be enough for 30 families to use the stoves for three hours each in the morning and evening, every day. In addition to the sewage, discarded vegetable waste from households and markets would be collected, shredded and fed into the digester tank, they said.

Officials added that with the spruced-up toilet in place, open defecation would be eliminated.

 


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